Luther is famous for his 95 Theses of October, 1517, in which he argued against the church's sale of indulgences. Indulgences were papers from the pope that offered people release from penance they owed for their sins. These theses put him at odds with the pope and the church because indulgences were a major source of church income. Luther argued that if the pope really had power to remove people's penalties for sin, he should do so freely for all.
Several weeks before the famous 95 Theses against indulgences, Luther had writted "A Disputation against Scholastic Theology," a set of 97 theses aimed at the core teachings of the Roman Catholic church's main theological scholars. After the controversy over indulgences got started, Luther was called upon by his brothers in the Augustinian order of monks to defend his theology. In doing so at Heidelberg, in 1518, Luther spoke more fully about the central problem's of Rome's theological system. Throughout his career, Luther continued to attack the system of Roman Catholicism which had people earning their place with God on the basis of merits, penances, pilgrimages, etc. Throughout his career, Luther's emphasis was on salvation by grace alone, coupled with a rejection of Rome's system that portrayed God giving rewards to the acts we do by our own wills. This is what most put him at odds with the church's teaching.
Luther also went as far as to call the pope the Antichrist because he saw the office of the papacy getting in the way of the gospel of Christ and claiming authority for a human leader that only Christ himself should have.
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A policy of appeasement, or giving in to the demands of the aggressor in order to keep the peace, was followed by France and Britain. Both countries followed the policy since they were not ready to take in another war in the 1930s.
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Domestic policy issues affect areas within U.S. borders, while foreign policy issues affect areas outside U.S. borders. is the answer
Explanation:
The Four Freedoms<span> were goals articulated by United States President Franklin D.</span>Roosevelt<span> on January 6, 1941. In an address known as the </span>Four Freedoms speech<span>(technically the 1941 State of the Union address), he proposed </span>four<span> fundamental </span>freedoms<span> that people "everywhere in the world" ought to enjoy
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The speech was intended to rally the American people against the Axis threat and to shift favor in support of assisting British and Allied troops.